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I felt it deserved a thread, regarding him resigning, not about who he may prefer to pitch for, also he came out and said he never said he would prefer to pitch back in LA, that was just a "rumor".

If the mod's decide to merge. Then they can feel free too.

I don't really care, I loved this signing last year, and I love it even more now. So I'm

just busting your balls

Originally Posted by CousinsEvansDUO

Not going to read your posts or respond to them because judging by your sig you are a clueless nutjob. That girl is a 7/10 and you probably think shes a 10. Which means IRL you must be a 5/10 and sorry no offense bro but I don't talk to 5/10s or below, and by bro I mean never my bro.

Free-agent right-hander Hiroki Kuroda has agreed to a one-year deal with the New York Yankees, sources told ESPN The Magazine's Buster Olney.

The contract is worth $15 million, plus incentives that are worth less than $1 million, the sources added.

The Yankees were the only club Kuroda would have signed with if he stayed in the U.S. and put off a return to Japan, agents and clubs with knowledge of the talks said. Other teams that had been reported as having interest in Kuroda -- particularly the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles Angels -- shifted their focus elsewhere.

The Dodgers, who were described by ESPNLosAngeles.com last week as having a "presumptive edge" in the bidding for Kuroda, turned their attention away from Kuroda in recent days, and are now pursuing Zack Greinke, Anibal Sanchez, Ryan Dempster and others.

ESPNLosAngeles.com reported on Friday that Kuroda had told friends that his first preference was to pitch in Southern California, where his two daughters are attending elementary school. Kuroda spent his first four seasons in the major leagues pitching for the Dodgers and hasn't uprooted his family.

However, he had his best season in the big leagues in New York this year, going 16-11 with a 3.32 ERA, two shutouts and a career high 219 2/3 innings pitched.

He finished eighth in the league in both ERA and WHIP. His 2.72 ERA at home was the second-lowest, since the opening of the new Yankee Stadium, by any Yankees pitcher who made at least 10 home starts in a season. And his 2.92 ERA from May 27 on was the fourth-lowest among all AL starters, trailing only David Price, Matt Harrison and Justin Verlander.